School vouchers are state- or school district-funded scholarships that allow students to attend a private school of the family’s choice rather than sending the child to public school. DC and 14 states offered school vouchers: Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Utah, Vermont, and Wisconsin. [2] President Trump has mentioned vouchers as a priority for school reform, and Department of Education Secretary Betsy DeVos is a supporter.

Proponents of school vouchers say that parents should have the right to choose their children’s education; that vouchers create a free marketplace for education overall to improve; that socioeconomic and racial segregations can be overcome with vouchers; and that vouchers lead to better student performance. Opponents say that vouchers violate the separation of church and state; that vouchers financially harm already-struggling public schools; that vouchers disadvantage special needs students; and that vouchers lead to worse academic performance.

Vouchers allow parents to choose their child’s education. Parents pay taxes for education and should be able to use those tax dollars to educate their children however and at whichever school they want. Chuck Weisenbach, Principal of Roncalli High, a private high school in Indianapolis, stated. "It is not the government's responsibility to tell me where to educate my children… That's not only my right, it's my duty. And I shouldn't have the government telling me based on some random, geographic location that I have to go to this public high school." [4] Vouchers also allow parents to choose a school that best fits a child's religious, cultural, or racial background, allowing that child to perform better in school, at home, and in his/her community. [18][19]

Con 1

Tax dollars are intended for the better secular education of all children, not the private religious education of a few. Using public funds to subsidize religious schools violates the separation of church and state. Of the 14 states with school voucher programs, 11 allow vouchers to be used at religious schools (Maine and Vermont do not). [2] According to an EdChoice survey of parents who use vouchers, the number one reason parents chose to use vouchers was "religious environment/instruction." [4] An estimated 85% of Milwaukee voucher students attended religious schools, with each Catholic school that accepted voucher students getting about $1 million in taxpayer dollars. [13][14

Pro 2

School vouchers improve education in general by making public schools compete with private schools for students in a free market. Public schools will have to offer a better education and safer spaces for learning, and be accountable to parents’ and students’ needs in order to compete with the private schools. Lennie Jarratt, Project Manager for School Reform at the Heartland Institute, stated, "free markets offer a much better way to hold educational institutions accountable for their failures. Under this model, inadequate schools lose money or are forced to close after consistently failing to perform… Why should we reward terrible schools with an indefinite stream of tax dollars?" [7] Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman, a champion of the free market, argued for school vouchers in 1955, stating vouchers would result in "great widening in the educational opportunities open to our children." [17]

Con 2

School vouchers funnel money away from already-struggling public schools and children and redistribute tax dollars to private schools and middle-class children. Superintendent of Fort Wayne, Indiana Schools, Wendy Robinson, Ed.D, calls school vouchers "an assault on public education." [4][9] In Indiana the voucher program now costs the state approximately $50 million more in state money going to education costs than originally budgeted. [4] One third of Indiana voucher students were not considered low-income, and, increasingly, the voucher students are from suburban, middle class families who already have access to good public schools. [4] Only 1% of Indiana voucher students were leaving failing schools. [4] Families who have the means to send their children to private schools should be responsible for the resulting bills instead of taking money from public school kids.

Pro 3

School vouchers allow school districts to overcome racial and other segregations. Betsy DeVos, US Secretary of Education, stated, "Empirical evidence finds school-choice programs lead to more integrated schools than their public-school counterparts." [15] School vouchers allow lower-income parents to avoid sending a child to a bad school, a school overwhelmed with gang violence, or a school that lacks racial diversity. A study of Louisiana's voucher program found that the program reduced racial segregation, a feat in a state with 34 school districts under federal desegregation orders. [6] Many families use vouchers to avoid the "school-to-prison pipeline," the phenomenon in which children of color are poorly educated, subjected to racist treatment, and treated like criminals in schools often ruled by gangs. [17] These children deserve better, and vouchers empower students to overcome racial and other disparities in their communities.

Con 3

School vouchers fail to accommodate and support disabled and special-needs students. Public schools are required by law to offer a wide range of free services to students who need extra or enhanced instruction, special services or equipment, or other educational accommodations. Private schools do not have those same requirements. For example, they do not have to follow the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), which requires things such as wheelchair ramps, note-takers, and sign-language interpreters. [5] Private schools also don’t have to follow the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), which requires that public schools provide all children with an "ambitious” educational program, rather than the bare minimum. [5] Private schools do not have to accept children with special needs, may require extra fees (billed to the parents) for services, and are under no obligation to follow Individualized Education Plans (IEPs). [5][11]

Pro 4

School vouchers offer students in failing schools access to a better education. Parents who cannot afford homes in neighborhoods with great school districts are often doomed to send their kids to bad schools with less funding, fewer good teachers, and fewer opportunities for students to excel. [8] The DC voucher program, the only federally-funded school voucher program in the country, increased students' graduation rates by 21% overall and 28% for female voucher students. [16] Parents of DC voucher recipients reported high levels of satisfaction, felt the school was safer than their public school option, and were more likely to give the school an A or B grade. [16] EdChoice, an education nonprofit, stated, "The empirical evidence shows that choice improves academic outcomes for participants and public schools… and strengthens the shared civic values and practices essential to American democracy." [20]

Con 4

School vouchers do not improve students’ academic performance. A 2016 study found "strong and consistent evidence" that school voucher students in Louisiana attending private schools "performed significantly worse in math." [6] Another study of Louisiana's program found attendance at a voucher-eligible private school increased the likelihood of a child failing math by 50%, and "negative and large" effects on reading, science, and social studies. [3] In Milwaukee, researchers found that students using vouchers to attend private schools fared "no better academically than their public school peers." [2] In Indianapolis, students who left public schools to attend private Catholic schools with vouchers showed "no benefit" in reading skills, while suffering "moderate and statistically significant average annual losses" in math, while those same students had been improving in public schools. [4]

Footnotes:

National Conference of State Legislatures, "School Vouchers," ncsl.org (accessed May 15, 2017)

National Conference of State Legislatures, "Interactive Guide to School Choice," ncsl.org, Feb. 3, 2017

Claudio Sanchez, "Lessons on Race and Vouchers from Milwaukee," npr.org, May 16, 2017

Cory Turner, Eric Weddle, and Peter Balonon-Rosen, "The Promise and Peril of School Vouchers," npr.org, May 12, 2017